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Aug26

Written by:Web Admin
8/26/2008 3:52 AM 

Adopting Ethiopian Orphans May Not be the Best Solution

New America Media, News feature,
Shane Bauer, Posted: Aug 26, 2008

Editor's note: Americans are adopting fewer orphans overseas except in one country: Ethiopia. But social workers are saying adoption is not the best solution to Ethiopia's problems, reports NAM contributing writer, Shane Bauer. Bauer is a freelance journalist and photographer based in the Middle East and Africa.

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia - On the outskirts of Addis Ababa a newly built orphanage called Rohobet is hidden among tin-roofed shacks on top of a eucalyptus and pine-covered hill. All around it, dirt roads are turned into muddy rivulets in the midday drizzle.

The inside of the largely empty house has features that are distinctly un-Ethiopian. A large kitchen table and chairs -- the eight children are to eat at a table rather than on the floor. Babies are fed by bottles and sleep in cribs, rather than the large pieces of cloths shaped into tiny hammocks that are the norm in most Ethiopian homes. When they travel, the smallest children sit in car seats. After leaving their home state of Oromo and coming to the orphanage, the children are being prepared for life in the United States.

In the four months that the Rohobet orphanage has existed, it has had five children adopted through the Minnesota-based agency, Better Future Adoption. The director of Rohobet is a man I'll call Tewodros since he asked not to be named for fear of reprisal from the government or the American adoption agency that funds his orphanage.

He had the personality of a non-profit entrepreneur, with a big heart and a mind for expanding his business. His mission was clear: raise more money and have more children adopted. "We have enough orphans, just not enough money," he said.

He also has enough of a demand. For his line of work, business is virtually booming. In recent years, Americans have become increasingly interested in adopting children from Ethiopia, a dynamic that a
New York Times article last year attributed to the fact that orphanages in Ethiopia are run by foreign agencies and